Star Wars Action Figure Jedi

star wars action figure jedi

The Star Wars Clone Wars Yoda Figure is the best Yoda toy yet! Figure has lightsaber, cane, display stand, and removable cloth jacket! Incredible detail amazing articulation bring Yoda to life like never before! Yoda goes to Rugosa to negotiate a deal with King Katuunko of Toydaria that will allow the Republic to build a supply base in the system. Count Dooku intervenes with a test for the Jedi: prove the Republic’s strength by battling Dooku’s droid army. Yoda accepts the challenge, and shows his combat expertise as well as the power of the Force. An “intergalactic” battle is raging – and you and your Yoda action figure are about to enter the fray! Arm your warrior with his lightsaber accessory so that he’s ready to charge into combat against his fiercest enemies. Whether fighting for the fate of the “universe” or standing at attention in your collection, this awesome action figure puts all of the excitement of the Star Wars saga right in the palm of your hand!

The Star Wars Clone Wars Mace Windu Jedi Master Action Figure is the best Mace toy yet! Figure has lightsaber, stand, and a bomb inside Jango Fett’s broken helmet! Incredible detail and amazing articulation bring Mace to life like never before! Mace Windu runs into trouble from Boba Fett during a rescue mission. Mace arrives on Vanqor searching for the survivors of a crashed Jedi cruiser. He finds Jango Fett’s helmet rigged with explosives: a treacherous reminder from Fett’s son that young Boba has a score to settle with the Jedi. An “intergalactic” battle is raging – and you and your Mace Windu action figure are about to enter the fray! Get him ready to charge into combat against his fiercest enemies, but watch out for his Jango Fett helmet accessory; it’s got hidden “explosives”! Whether fighting for the fate of the “universe” or standing at attention in your collection, this awesome action figure puts all of the excitement of the Star Wars saga right in the palm of your hand! Figure comes with 2-piece Jango Fett helmet accessory with hidden “explosives”, Galactic Battle Game card, battle base and game die.

Who is The Last Jedi ? The secret is in the movie, populated by droids and aliens and heroes like the Star Wars: The Last Jedi Luke Skywalker (Jedi Exile) 3 3/4-Inch Action Figure! This recreation of Luke comes in an awesome costume modeled right after what you see on the big screen, complete with cool accessories. Order yours today!

What’s a Star Wars Hero Mashers figure? It’s the opportunity for kids to take their favorite characters from the Star Wars saga and mix and match all of their parts to create Darth Stormtrooper, or Boba Skywalker, or literally anything they can come up with! This Star Wars Hero Mashers Return of the Jedi Action Figure features 5 action figures with mix and match parts to create custom mash-ups!From Hasbro toys, this fun line is the newest creation in the action figure universe. They’re all officially licensed and recommended for ages 4 and up, due to small parts. Be sure to check out the rest of our Star Wars Hero Mashers so any little fan can have a bunch of options for mixing and matching!

Kids and fans alike can imagine the biggest battles and missions in the Star Wars saga with figures from The Black Series! With exquisite features and decoration, this series embodies the quality and realism that Star Wars devotees love. At long last, Rey has found Luke Skywalker, the last Jedi Master in the galaxy. Hoping to find a hero of legend, she must unlearn what she has learned as Skywalker challenges her expectations. This 6-inch-scale Rey (Jedi Training) figure is carefully detailed to look like the heroine from Star Wars: The Last Jedi. This figure features premium detail and multiple points of articulation, and includes 3 character-specific accessories. Ages 4 and up.

Hasbro – Released in September 2017. Star Wars The Last Jedi Elite Praetorian Guard – 3.75 inch – Black Series. Kids and fans alike can imagine the biggest battles and missions in the Star Wars saga with figures from The Black Series! With exquisite features and decoration, this series embodies the quality and realism that Star Wars devotees love. As the Supreme Leader of the First Order, Snoke wa…

Hasbro – Released in September 2017. Star Wars The Last Jedi Luke Skywalker (Jedi Master) – 3.75 inch – Black Series. Kids and fans alike can imagine the biggest battles and missions in the Star Wars saga with figures from The Black Series! With exquisite features and decoration, this series embodies the quality and realism that Star Wars devotees love. After tragedy destroyed his attempt to rebui…

$14.96

JEDI ACTION FIGURES FROM THE STAR WARS COLLECTIONS OF 1996-09 from the Hasbro Line

star wars action figure jedi

Star Wars: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith (2005) by Daniel Turpin

“No longer the boy you trained. Consumed by Darth Vader he is.” -Yoda- After 28 years, the circle is finally complete as George Lucas delivers the final installment of the Star Wars Saga. Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith could not be a better finale. My history with Star Wars is a long one. I’ve been there since the very beginning. br> Inspired by the oldest sources of drama, Revenge of the Sith quickly shows us some of the key ingredients. The best one of all, the bible, with a dash of Shakespeare, a dab of Greek tragedy, equal parts mythology, matinee-serial with a sprinkle of Akira Kirosawa. Lucas mixes it up to make one helluva fantasy stew that makes for one of the best installments! This is a horribly sad movie where virtually everyone dies and we so want everyone to pull themselves out of the mess they are in. The meat of the story and the darkest, yet I was still shocked that a Star Wars movie made me feel this way, but I also felt terribly giddy as I knew I was in for a fantastic ride, one I have waited on for nearly thirty-years. It wasn’t going to be fun, but definitely worthwhile. Episode I laid the groundwork; it made eye contact, blew us a kiss, it is the tease. Episode II showed us some skin, got us hot and bothered, it is foreplay. Episode III strips down and tackles us with full-blown, room-rattling, eyes-in-the-back-of-the-head, it is the intercourse. It’s a satisfying roll in the hay I might add. Beginning with an exclamation of War! from the opening crawl, our heroes are immersed in an eye-popping space battle between a quartet of Federation droid attack planes and Anakin and Obi Wan. Showing us why he’s the best star pilot in the galaxy, Anakin drags us into the adventure by saying, “This is where the fun begins.” In rescuing Palpatine, Anakin and the Count melee once last time, only this time, instead of arresting his foe and after much goading from Palpatine, he executes him. “It’s not the Jedi way’, the boy says remorsefully afterward. But that taste of instant justice and righteous fury will prove addictive. After more escapes and escapades, the Jedi bring the Chancellor back to Coruscant, where Anakin is reunited with his love-and secret wife Padme Amidala. She’s pregnant, a condition that if known, would mean Anakin’s expulsion from the Jedi order. The trouble begins when Anakin begins having dreams, premonitions, of his wife dying in childbirth. Something he becomes so obsessed with, he defers to Jedi Master Yoda for counsel. “The fear of loss is the path to the Dark side” he tells him. “Train yourself to let go of everything you fear to lose.” Meaning: loved ones die, get over it. Anakin calls bulllshit and refuses to accept Yodas words so he turns elsewhere, to Palpatine. The Sith in hiding has only poison to pour in the young man’s ear. He tells him everything he wants to hear. They are lies of course, but Anakin does not know nor care. He can recite the Jedi code, but can’t feel it. The sith’s mantra of relying on their passion for their strength. Thinking inward and only of themselves, resonates highly with the boy. Irony steps in as he makes for an ideal apprentice for Darth Sidious. And so the film only gets darker from here on out. Obi Wan is ordered away to Utapu to stop General Grevious, while Anakin has way too many chats with Palpatine, thus the drama begins. Lucas did his very best I feel as Skywalker’s turn is a nice, even-paced, deliberate one. Many have scoffed saying Anakin’s turn was too short. Not so, signs of his fate were foreshadowed in Episode 1 during his tense interview with Master Yoda. After the massacre of the sand people in Episode II, his fate was fore ever sealed. I enjoyed how Anakin’s dark side turn was steeped in irony. His dream of Padme dying in childbirth was only half a truth. Of course we all know it was he who caused her to die. It was Yoda, not Palpatine that had the secret to “immortality.” So the Jedi possessed that which he thought the he needed to obtain by being a Sith, which was not the case. I bought Anakin’s reasons for turning, he was being used by two people he looked up to; Obi Wan was using him to spy on Chancellor Palpatine and the Chancellor wanted Anakin to tell him the Jedi’s every move. He was being pulled apart by both sides, both making sense and thusly confusing the hell out of the boy. In the end, the Jedi’s sort asked for what they got. Anakin wants to be a Jedi Master. Even though he’s gone through the trials, done what is expected of him, the Jedi’s basically tell him to go screw. This of course creates some problems. With distrust of the Jedi’s already laid out, Palpatine makes his move. By stroking his ego and about that which is most precious to him, his wife Padme, Palpatine plays the boy like a fiddle and tells him every goddamn thing he wants to hear and then some. With the death of his mother, Anakin becomes obsessive about those he loves, to the point of paranoia about his family’s safety. Palpatine constantly lies through his teeth to the boy. We know he’s a good kid, means well, a true talent who’s about to be a father and that’s why we the audience sit back in our seats and squirm while we scream, “DON’T LISTEN TO HIM!” Oh but, he does. We watch as Palpatine lays it on super thick. Lie after lie, he makes promises and piles it on as to why the Jedi’s are rotten to the core. His case is persuasive, as his mannered, soothing voice tells of how the Jed are spurred by power and lust and limited by their code. By appealing to Anakin’s need and greed, he turns the lad into Darth Vader and secures his own unlimited power! Things reach the point of no return when Anakin contributes in the killing of one of his own, Jedi Master Mace Windu in a great showdown between he and Palpatine. Even after he cuts Windu’s hand off, (the killing duties go to Palpatine as he electrocutes him and sends him out a high-rise window) Anakin still feels conflicted. In the films best scene, before Windu’s demise, Anakin looks out the Jedi temple across the city. Padme, in her apartment, does the same, tears run down the boys face as he feels torn. Again irony steps in as he will do anything possible to save her from dying, yet he won’t stop himself from siding with the madman of the universe, contributing to both their deaths her literally, his spiritually. As you can tell I loved this film like no other in recent years. As a moviegoer and Star Wars fan it pleased me in ways I didn’t think possible. (Sounds dirty, don’t it?) The perfromances are all excellent. Natalie Portman, not a lot of screen time this go around, but she makes every moment work. A nice throwaway bit is when she arrives on Mustafar. The ship lands and she pauses, holding her head in her hands, aware somehow of what is about to happen. Hayden Christiansen as Anakin has taken too much crap for what he was hired to do. Some have labeled him a bad actor. In the Star Wars universe that makes no sense, but as usual, the naysayers are dead wrong. Hayden’s interpretation is a revelation. His performance is what sucks us in and by the time he’s donning the iron lung, we feel bad for him. I never thought I would pity Darth Vader, but I did. Here was a handsome young man with a hot wife and all the privileged he could handle and it was taken away through lies and deception. Not to mention all the pain he endured from being burned in lava. However, he murdered the younglings so his pain was his price. Going into the film I had some pangs of reservation that somehow the characters menace would be neutered. Just the opposite actually. A cartoon or thinly-drawn character is not scary. If ANH had not had sequels, Vader would be just that-a cartoon. Without Empire and Jedi to show us what he was capable of, he would never have reached his iconic status, which is a bad-ass, evil motherfucker. He’s more of a tragic figure now as we know of what he did to become Lord Vader. He has to live with the fact he killed his wife and kids. (Although his family survived, he has no knowledge of that nor does he know that Padme had twins, thus explains his ignorance about Leia until Jedi) Think of it this way, you’d be grumpy too if your genitalia was burned completely off. The showdown between the Jedis is not so much about action or choreography, but emotion. The longest duel of any of the films it’s certainly the saddest as heroes become villains, friends become enemies and a era of oppression is born. In the opening space battle, we see what old Ben Kenobi is talking about in ANH when he says “He was the best star pilot in the galaxy…and he was a good friend”. When I hear morons babbling on about the kids performance I have to ask them, what movie did YOU see? Ewan McGregor is fantastic practically channeling the spirit of Alec Guinness as he delivers his lines in that familiar clipped, old-English accent. It’s redundant to say he’s great, but he has several memorable moments. His besting of General Grevious is great fun and on the other side, his best dramatic moments of the entire prequel trilogy are during his melee with Anakin, choking back tears he screams at his friend, “I loved you like a brother! We feel his pain as he realizes he has failed his padawan. As great as McGregor is, Ian McDiarmid as Chancellor/Emperor Palpatine is outstanding. A festering, seething cauldron of hate and power, McDiarmid chews every scene he’s in and the film is the better for it. His first time with a lightsaber, the character and actor seems to enjoy themselves cutting a swath through Jedi ass. Not since Khan Sign from “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” has there been a more compelling and charismatic baddie. Although Khan was a chump compared to Palpatine. All Khan wanted was revenge on Captain Kirk for his exile and the death of his wife. Palpatine is Hitler in a hoody, a gurgling, giddy evil piece of shit who demands unlimited power and total and complete control. Lucas took a chance by not having Palpatine evil from the outset. One of the best slow-burns in all of cinema, Palpatine’s rise is just as satisfying as Anakin’s plumment into evil. His best scene is his reveal to the all of the Senators as he shows what the Jedis have done to him and why they must become enemies of the new galactic empire. As his fascist movement is gaining momentum, he pauses, and as if to mirror these strange times we live in, he claims it’s all in the name of peace. Supporting nods to Christopher Lee as Dooku and Jimmy Smits as Princess Leia’s foster dad, Bail Organa of Alderaan, are both excellent in their brief time on screen. C-3PO is hardly seen, but has a great bit in the films final moments as it answers some questions about ANH and although the humor is sparse, R2 has some of the films biggest laughs onboard the republic battlecruiser and continues to save everyone’s sorry asses. General Grevious with his creepy chicken walk is another visual marvel. I like how he acts as the perfect distraction for Kenobi while Anakin is being mind-fucked across the galaxy. As great as all of the performances are, Yoda steals the show! ILM needs that Oscar now. His resemblance to his iconic debute in Empire is breathtaking. Showing us once again why size matters not; his battle with Palpatine is his finest hour of the prequels. Of course the special-effects are beyond critique at this point. It’s hard to tell where the real world ends and the trickery begins. Un-fucking believeable! They are simply, the tits! As great as the visuals are, I was sucked in by the drama and how Anakin/Vader is truly a tragic figure, a mere pawn for the true villain. Composer John Williams delivers the goods for the sixth and final time. Anakin and Obi Wan’s “Battle of Heroes” theme is the standout piece. Some unusual sounds that make this one his best soundtracks yet. His absolute crowning achievement is the finale music when the twins are being born. We hear Luke and Leia’s theme then it merges into the Star Wars finale. Brilliant. In an effort to erase the horrible shit known as the Holiday Special from our collective memories, the Wookiees get a much needed and long overdue makeover. We finally see the Wookiee home world of Kashhhyk. A lush jungle planet where apparently Yoda fits right in. The films closing moments are its best as the theme of a new hope, (for both the good and the bad guys) is played out. Padme dies, but her children live, the Jedi purge begins, Yoda and Obi Wan go into exile, Palpatines’ Empire is born, Anakin dies, but Lord Vader lives only to be redeemed a generation later by his only son. Padme’s dying words set up the classic trilogy beautifully when she says, “There’s still good in him.” Profound, as Kenbobi never considers it even when its uttered by Luke in Jedi. As he does in all Star Wars flicks, Lucas gives us a great homage.When Vader is gets off the table, he moves just like the pitiful Frankenstein’s monster as Palpatine cackles like the madman he is. The last shot of the film, Obi Wan delivering Luke to the Lars homestead on Tatooine still brings a tear to the eye. I give kudos to George Lucas on a job well done. He has brought a satisfying conclusion to a magnificent opus. While doing so has endured the idiotic slings and arrows from his so-called fans and the snobby film elite (and the ones who think they are) so it gives me great pleasure to see once again he has the last laugh as ROTS becomes THE highest grossing flick of the year. I conclude this review with a tinge of sadness since this is the very last Star Wars movie I can get excited about. Brilliant!